Central Accident Insurance v. Rembe

77 N.E. 123, 220 Ill. 151
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 77 N.E. 123 (Central Accident Insurance v. Rembe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central Accident Insurance v. Rembe, 77 N.E. 123, 220 Ill. 151 (Ill. 1906).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilkin

delivered the opinion of the court:

The defendant made timely and proper motions to have the jury instructed to find it not guilty, but the motions were overruled and exceptions taken. That ruling is assigned as error; also that the trial court erred in the giving of the first and second instructions on behalf of the plaintiffs. Most of the brief and argument on behalf of the appellant is devoted to the alleged error in giving those instructions, although the refusal to give the peremptory instruction is urged as reversible error and may be properly considered first, for the reason that if there was error in that regard other questions are immaterial.

The declaration contains two counts. The first declares upon the policy as it was first tendered to the assured without the attached slip, and avers that while the deceased was in pursuit of his avocation as a physician and surgeon, and while undertaking to remove the cork from a bottle, his finger was injured, and the wound caused blood poisoning, resulting in his death. The second declares upon the policy as modified by the attached slip, and avers the injury from the broken bottle, and that poison matter from the patient suffering from syphilis became injected into the wound at the time of the accident, resulting in death.

The evidence is to the effect that on November 25, 1903, the date of the injury to the finger, Dr. Rembe, the insured, was a middle-aged man of strong physique, enjoying perfect health; that he was on that day called upon to treat a patient suffering with syphilis, and while preparing medicine for him and attempting to remove the cork from a bottle he accidently broke the neck of the bottle, the pieces of glass cutting a small wound in the middle finger of his right hand; that he immediately dressed the wound and bandaged it, but the next morning the hand began to swell, causing him great pain, and finally resulted in his death from septicaemia, or blood poisoning, three weeks later. These facts are not disputed, and they not only tend to prove, but establish, the fact that the death of the insured resulted from the accidental injury to his finger, and we are unable to see how it can be seriously contended that under these facts and the law applicable to the case his beneficiaries are not entitled to recover under the first count of their declaration. The policy without the attached slip provided that upon the death of the insured caused by external violence and accidental means the company would pay to the beneficiaries therein named, if surviving, the sum of $5000. The contention of the defendant below is, that the death was not caused by the wound alone, but by blood poisoning, and therefore the company is not liable,-—in other words, that the injury was not the proximate cause of the death of the insured. The cause of the death, as we understand it, was the wound in the finger, by means of which blood poisoning intervened. Without the accidental wounding of the finger blood poisoning would not have ensued, and therefore that disease was only incidental to the wound. If we turn to the evidence of the physicians who testified in the case, we find that they, with one accord, agreed that under the facts and circumstances shown the septicaemia, or blood poisoning, .would not have been produced but for the incision or wound in the finger, into which the poisonous germs entered and contaminated the blood. At least their evidence strongly tends to prove that fact, and for the purposes of this decision that is all that is necessary.

In Martin v. Manufacturers’ Accident Indemnity Co. 45 N. E. Rep. 379, the insured accidentally injured the second finger of his right hand in some way not clearly explained, but probably from tire wires of an umbrella which he was attempting to raise, and the injury was followed by blood poisoning, of which he afterwards died. Prior to the injury of the finger he had crushed the thumb of his left hand, and one of the questions in the case was whether the wound of the finger was the only, proximate and sole cause of the death of the insured,—that is, whether or not the accident and inoculation of the wound were co-incident, or whether the inoculation occurred after the injury, from suppuration of the wound on the thumb of the left hand. The question whether the blood poisoning was caused by matter from the wound on the thumb or was immediately developed from the wound on the finger, by inoculation or otherwise, at the very time of that injury, was litigated on the trial, and medical experts were called by each side to testify on the subjéct. The court charged the jury, in substance, that if the blood poisoning was caused by contact of the wound, or from matter communicated from the thumb after the injury to the finger, the plaintiff could not recover. The court of appeals said: “We think the court did not err to the prejudice of the defendant in charging that if the jury should find that the virulent matter which produced the blood poisoning was communicated to the wound co-incident with its infliction, and the death was produced by the blood poisoning, it was a death within the policy. The policy provides that the insurance shall not extend ‘to any case except where the injury is the proximate and sole cause of the disability or death.’ * * * There was medical testimony to the effect that the virus was probably on the umbrella, or whatever instrument it was which inflicted the wound; and the condition of the thumb and the bandaging afforded an inference that that was not the source of the virulent infection. All the evidence upon this point was submitted to the jury, including the statement of the assured in the notice of injury, and the jury having found the fact in favor of the plaintiff, the finding cannot now be disturbed. Upon the fact as found, the inoculation of the wound at the very time of 'its infliction was a part of the injury and the immediate cause of the death. Without the wound there would have been no inoculation, and so, without the- inoculation the wound would not, probably, have been fatal. ' But it is impossible to separate the two in the practical construction of the conditions in question. Both were contributing and co-existing causes of the death, set in motion and operating together from the same moment of time.”

In the case of Western Commercial Travelers v. Smith, 40 L. R. A. 365, the accidental abrasion of the skin of one of the toes of the insured resulted in blood poisoning and death. The United States Circuit Court of Appeals in deciding the case said: “It is earnestly contended, however, that the death was not caused by bodily injuries effected by external, violent and accidental means, because the disease of blood poisoning was the cause and the abrasion of the skin of the toe was only the occasion,—the locality in which the disease first appeared. * * * If the death was caused by a disease-which was not the result of any bodily infirmity or disease in existence at the time of the accident, but which was itself caused by the external, violent and accidental means which produced the bodily injury, the association was equally liable to pay the indemnity. In such case the disease is an effect of the accident; the incidental means produced and used by the original moving cause to bring about its fatal effect; a mere link in the chain of causation between the accident and the death.” To the same effect are the cases of Omberg v. United States Mutual Accident Ass. 40 S. W. Rep. 909; Freeman v. Mercantile Mutual' Accident Ass. 17 L. R. A. 753; Travelers’ Ins. Co. v. Murray, 16 Col. 296; Young v. Accident Ins. Co. 6 id. 1.

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Bluebook (online)
77 N.E. 123, 220 Ill. 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-accident-insurance-v-rembe-ill-1906.